Committed steps Flashcards
1
Q
What are the committed steps in Glycolysis? How are they regulated?
A
- Hexokinase -
- glucose —-> glucose 6-phosphate
- glucose 6-phosphate inhibits it
- Phosphofructokinase -
- fructose 6-phosphate —-> Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate
- Inhibits:
- ATP
- Citrate (in liver)
- Low pH (in muscle)
- Activates:
- Fructose-2,6-bisphosphate
- AMP
- Pyruvate Kinase
- Phosphoenolpyruvate ——> Pyruvate
- Inhibits:
- ATP
- Alanine
- Activates
- Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate
2
Q
What are the committed steps in Gluconeogenesis? How are they regulated?
A
- Pyruvate carboxylase
- pyruvate —–> Oxaloacetate
- Inhibited by:
- ADP
- Activated by
- Acetyl CoA
- Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
- Oxaloacetate ——> Phosphoenolpyruvate
- Inhibited by:
- ADP
- Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase
- Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate —–> Fructose 6-phosphate
- Inhibited by:
- Fructose-2,6-bisphosphate
- AMP
- Activated by:
- ATP
- Citrate
3
Q
What are the regulating steps in the citric acid cycle? What regulates them?
A
- Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex:
- Pyruvate —-> Acetyl CoA
- Inhibits:
- NADH, ATP, Acetyl CoA
- Activates:
- ADP
- Pyruvate
- Isocitrate dehydrogenase:
- Isocitrate —-> Alpha-ketoglutarate
- Inhibits:
- NADH, ATP
- Activates:
- ADP
- Alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex
- Alpha-ketoglutarate —–> Succinyl CoA
- Inhibits:
- NADH, ATP, Succinyl CoA
4
Q
What are the committed steps in glycogen synthesis and how are they regulated?
A
- Glycogen Synthase
- Adds UDP-glucose residue to glycogen chain.
- Inhibited by:
- changing of A form to B form by glycogen synthase kinase.
- Activated by:
- PP1
- Insulin
- Changing of B form to A form
5
Q
What are the committed steps in the breakdown of glycogen and how are they regulated?
A
- Glycogen phosphorylase
- Removes a glucose 1-phosphate residue from glycogen
- Inhbited by:
- glucose
- ATP
- A form changing back to B form.
- Activated by:
- glucose 6-phosphate
- Phosphorylation of B form to A form by phosphorylase kinase.
- Epinephrine
- Glucagon
6
Q
What are the committed steps in fatty acid breakdown and how are they regulated?
A
7
Q
What are the committed steps in fatty acid synthesis and how are they regulated?
A
- Acetyl CoA carboxylase
- Acetyl CoA —–> Malonyl CoA
- Inhibited by:
- phosphorylation
- palmitoyl CoA
- Glucagon
- Epinephrine
- Activated by:
- dephosphorylation
- citrate
- Insulin
8
Q
What does HMG-CoA Reductase do and how is it regulated?
A
- Catalyzes the comitted step of converting Acetyl CoA and acetoacetyl CoA to Mevalonate in the cholesterol syntheic pathway.
- Regulation:
- Control of transcription
- Sterol regulatory element binding proteins (SREBPs) bind to Sterol regulatory element (SRE) on DNA
- Happens when cholesterol levels are low.
- Control of translation
- Non-sterol metabolites derived from Mevalonate inhibit translation of reductase mRNA
- Degredation of reductase by ubiquitination
- membrane domain of reductase senses signals from increasing concentration of sterols
- causes it to become polyubiquitinated and ejected from membrane
- it is then degraded by proteosome
- Phosphorylation in response to ATP levels
- Phosphorylation of reductase switches it off
- phosphorylated by an AMP-activated protein kinase
- Thus, cholesterol synthesis stops when ATP level is low.
- Control of transcription